The year is set to close with the US stock market at, or very close to, record highs after what has been a turbulent year for the financial system.
The rise on Wall Street, which has been boosted by the âdovishâ turn by the US Federal Reserve at its December 13 meeting, is being fuelled by market expectations of at least three and possibly as many as six interest rate cuts in 2024.
New York Stock Exchange [AP Photo/Richard Drew]
The surge is extending across the board. The Dow has hit seven record highs for the month and the S&P 500 is fractionally below its record high reached in January 2022 after posting a 34 percent rise from its low last year. And in what has been described as a âbond carnivalâ the world biggest debt market, that for US Treasuries, is on track to make its biggest two-month gain on record.
The tech-heavy NASDAQ 100 index is set to record its largest rise since 1999, at the height of the dot.com bubble. It is up 55 percent this year, fuelled by the prospects of profits from artificial intelligence.
But the market frenzy is being accompanied by expressions of concern that the extreme volatility in the financial system, evident throughout the year, can spark major problems, if not a crisis.
âWe have an âeverything rallyâ at the yearâs end. The magnitude is breathtaking,â Sonja Laud, the chief investment officer at the UKâs largest asset manager Legal & General Investment, told the Financial Times (FT). âIâm worried about that. Thereâs no room for error.â
And, notwithstanding the euphoria in markets over the prospect of rate cuts, the effects of the steep rise in rates over the past 18 monthsâthe Fed rate is now more than 5 percent after being near zero for more than a decadeâare still flowing through the system and can cause sudden shocks.
No one, for example, predicted that the rises would lead to three of the four largest banking failures in US history in March, marked by the fastest run on deposits seen in history, and would require a major intervention by the Fed and government authorities to prevent a financial meltdown.
It is significant that one of the areas of greatest concern is the US Treasury market, where government debt is bought and sold. Now approaching $27 trillion it is the bedrock of the US and global financial system.
It is showing signs of increased volatility. In the middle portion of the year yields on 10-year bonds were rising as they were sold offâyields and bond prices move in opposite directionsâin the expectation that the Fed was going to maintain its monetary policy tightening stance.
But as inflation numbers started to come down and wage demands continued to be suppressed by the trade union apparatuses, there was a rising clamour in the markets for rate cuts. At first the Fed appeared to resist these demands. But at the December meeting Fed chair Jerome Powell threw in the towel and made a pivot, just two weeks after insisting that the previous orientation would be maintained.
The result has been that the yield on the 10-year bond, which touched just over 5 percent in October is now down to around 4 percent and set to go even lower. Such rapid movements in a market where shifts of fractions of a percentage point can be significant, is indicative of instability.
Another cause of concern which has emerged this year is the so-called basis trade where big bets are made exploiting the slight difference between bond prices and what they will fetch in futures markets. Because the differences are so small traders need to borrow large amounts of money to make the operation profitable.
In a recent post on his Chartbook site, economic historian Adam Tooze noted that regulators were âparticularly concernedâ about the speculative character of the trade in which a hedge fund employs a minimum of its own money and a maximum of borrowed money.
The amounts involved are large, more than half a trillion dollars.
âAccording to one set of estimates,â Tooze wrote, âin December 2022 the hedge funds owed $553 billion on basis trade borrowing and were leveraged at a ratio of 56 to 1. This creates the potential either for widespread losses in the credit system or major hedge fund failure.â
The numbers involved have almost certainly gone up this year, creating the risk that the failure of even one fund can set off a âdash for cashâ and the kind of âdoom loopâ that developed in the UK in October 2022 when falling bond prices forced pension funds to sell bonds to raise cash, sending prices even lower.
But as Tooze noted, even as regulators seek to intervene, they are to a great extent operating in the dark because âwe donât know all that we might about how the Treasury market and its working.â
Even if they start to come down, interest rates are likely to remain well above the near zero level to which they fell after the financial crash of 2008 and the Fedâs policy of quantitative easing involving the outlay of trillions of dollars as it bought government debt.
US government debt, boosted by increased government spending on war and the military is reaching new record highsâit now stands at more than $33 trillion. But the interest bill on this debt is rising rapidly and is now the third largest item of government spending after Medicare and Social Security.